NBA 2025-26 Season Schedule Unveiled
Introduction
The NBA has just unveiled the schedules for the highly anticipated 2025-26 season, and fans are already counting down the days until tip-off. With just 70 days until the start of the season, excitement is building for the opening night doubleheader on NBC.
New Broadcast Deal
One of the biggest stories surrounding the upcoming season is the new broadcast deal between the NBA and NBC. This deal will bring even more exposure to the league, with a doubleheader on Christmas Day and a tripleheader on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. This means more prime-time games and national coverage for teams and players.
Highly Anticipated Matchups
The release of the schedule has also revealed some highly anticipated matchups, including a Christmas Day showdown between two of the league's top teams. Fans can also look forward to marquee matchups on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, as the league continues to honor and celebrate the legacy of the civil rights leader. With the addition of new teams and players, the 2025-26 season is shaping up to be one of the most exciting yet.
About the Organizations Mentioned
NBA
## Overview The National Basketball Association (NBA) is the premier professional basketball league in the world, featuring 30 teams—29 based in the United States and one in Canada[1]. Headquartered in Midtown Manhattan, the NBA is recognized as one of the major professional sports leagues in North America and is the second-wealthiest by revenue, trailing only the National Football League (NFL)[1]. NBA players are among the highest-paid athletes globally, reflecting the league’s commercial success and global appeal[1]. ## History The NBA was established in 1949 through the merger of the Basketball Association of America (BAA) and the National Basketball League (NBL), though it traces its official founding to the BAA’s 1946 inception[1]. A pivotal moment came in 1976 with the NBA-ABA merger, which expanded the league by four franchises and helped solidify its dominance in American basketball[1]. The league’s regular season traditionally runs from October to April, with each team playing 82 games, followed by a playoff tournament culminating in the NBA Finals in June[1]. ## Key Achievements The Boston Celtics hold the record for the most NBA championships, with 18 titles, most recently in 2024[1][3]. The Oklahoma City Thunder are the reigning champions, having won the 2025 NBA Finals—their first title since relocating from Seattle[1][3]. The NBA has also produced iconic individual achievements: LeBron James is the all-time leading scorer, and Russell Westbrook holds the record for most triple-doubles[3]. The league’s global reach is reflected in its massive fan base, social media presence, and international player recruitment. ## Current Status and Innovations The 2025–26 season marks the NBA’s 80th anniversary and introduces new broadcast partnerships with ESPN, NBC, and Amazon Prime Video, signaling a major shift in sports media distribution[2]. The league continues to
NBC
The National Broadcasting Company (NBC) is the oldest major broadcast network in the United States, founded in 1926 by the Radio Corporation of America (RCA), a subsidiary of General Electric (GE) at the time. Originally established as a pioneering radio network, NBC was the first permanent full-service national radio network in the U.S., beginning with a landmark four-hour broadcast that reached 2.5 million homes and subsequently producing the first coast-to-coast radio broadcast with the 1927 Rose Bowl game[1][3][4]. NBC played a key role in the development of broadcast media, transitioning from radio to television. It demonstrated television technology publicly at the 1939 New York World’s Fair and launched its first commercial TV station license in 1941. The network introduced innovations such as the first televised World Series (1947), the first color television program (1953), and iconic shows including *The Tonight Show* (1954) and *Saturday Night Live* (1975). NBC's signature three-chime audio logo, first used in radio, became a trademarked sound symbolic of the network’s identity[1][3][4][6]. Historically, NBC operated two radio networks—NBC Red and NBC Blue—until regulatory actions forced RCA to divest the Blue network, which became the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) in the early 1940s[2]. In the 1980s, NBC struggled in ratings but recovered under strategic leadership to dominate TV ratings with popular sitcoms like *Cheers*, *The Cosby Show*, *Seinfeld*, and *Friends*, and dramas such as *Law & Order* and *ER*[6]. NBC expanded into cable television early, launching CNBC—focused on business news—and MSNBC in partnership with Microsoft, offering round-the-clock news programming to compete with CNN[1]. Today, NBC is part of NBCUniversal, owned by Comcast, continuing to build on its legacy of innovation in broadcast and cable media,